Main menu

Tag Archives: apartment

I will soon be moving back to the US. There are things I am going to miss about Sweden, and the town I have been living in,…Linköping. I am sure there will be other things I will notice after I leave. Here are 12 things I know I will miss, not in any particular order.

1. The small town atmosphere in a fairly large town. The city limits has a population of about 100,000. Because there are few high rise buildings, it maintains a small town feel.

2. Most everyone in Sweden speaks English, since the education system is serious about students learning English. All I need to do is speak in English, and they will switch from Swedish to English. Often the Swede I am talking to will say they are enjoying speaking in English because they don’t always get to practice it.

3. I will miss shopping downtown. It is a walking downtown with many, different shops. Anything from clothing, fabric, craft supplies, household décor and necessities, tools, and groceries. In the US there are very few downtowns that still have this feature.

Walking Street in Linköping

4. Walking is something I will miss. I can get anywhere I want in about a half hour. It is refreshing and good exercise.

5. I have enjoyed riding a bike about town. Linköping is a bicycling city. It is easy to ride a bike around town because most of it is fairly level. Walking and biking is the main way residents navigate to work, shopping, and leisure activities. In the US most areas do not have the bike lanes along the sidewalk, which makes biking more dangerous. Plus towns and the places you need to go are spread out more. So hopping in the car is the norm.

Bikes parked in Linköping

6. Gamla Linköping (Old Linköping), is like stepping back into time with the 19th century town. I can buy handcrafted wood, handmade paper, old style toys, candles, handmade crafts, or candy. The café has table settings of the period, and good coffee, tea, pastries, and breakfast sandwiches. Then I might see townspeople dressed in period costume or a demonstration of old time methods, or just enjoy the museum displays.

Gamla Linköping

7. The abundance of park, and forest areas to walk in town, or bordering town, that lets you remember the creator and the peace of nature.

8. I will miss the simple houses of Sweden. There are very few mansion type houses. If you see one, it was probably a castle at one time.

9. Ryttargårdskyrkan , the church I attend will be missed. I listen to the service with head phones. A translator gives the English translation. The fika time has allowed me to meet a lot of very nice Swedes.

Listening to sermon with translation headphones

10. I will even miss our apartment. The ease of cleaning the entire apartment in 15 minutes is enough to be missed.

11. Räksmõrgås (shrimp open face breakfast sandwich), meatballs with lingonberry sauce, potatoes fixed in so many ways, and the pizza…I love the European style pizza.

Raksmorgas

12. Last but not least, I will miss the people. If you ask for anything, like to explain something, or directions, every one of them has been gracious to help. I have met people from England, Ireland, Egypt, Serbia, Israel, France, and of course Sweden. The people from all these countries were from the church, and some are in the English Bible reading group I am a part of.

I will miss my American friend who is married to a Swede, and has lived here for 11 years. We have “hung out” together every week that we were both in town. We met because she made a comment on a blog that I also read, and said she lived in Linköping, and was an American living in Sweden. That was only a couple weeks after I arrived, and I contacted her, we have been good friends since. I just met another American living in Sweden. Already we have started a good friendship.

We have all shared, and laughed, and compared cultures, and teased one another, no matter where our culture of origin has been. Those are things that good friends do.

Also, oddly enough I have a feeling of missing out on the friendships that have not quite developed yet but probably would.

Well it’s time to say goodbye Linköping, but not without a few tears. Tack! Hej då!

I have been asked by some friends, “What is the apartment like, that you live in at Sweden?” Sometimes I start off by saying, there is no dishwasher, or air conditioning, and I have to walk over to the laundry room to do the laundry.

Okay…okay… it’s time to cut the negative talk. I think that they often think that our apartment is in a building that is a “ruins”. Whenever we watch “International House Hunters”, US version, it seems that the people choose a dump of a place, whether it is a house, or an apartment, and pay way too much, because that is all that is available.

Sweden has modern homes, and modern apartments. Some of the buildings may be older, but most have been renovated to today’s standards. Air conditioning is still optional in Sweden. Some hotels don’t even have it.

Coming from Georgia in the USA, air conditioning is a must. Temperatures of 90 F, and above, and humidity levels equal or higher, makes for a pretty miserable existence without air conditioning for modern society.

I know there was a time without air conditioning, don’t tell me…I lived it.

In Sweden the need for air conditioning is much lower. People are still wearing jackets here most days. At least I am not seeing the scarfs, and mittens this week. The season is short. By the end of August, and beginning of September the jackets will be back. There is often a breeze in Sweden, and without air, you can actually open the windows. It is really nice to hear the birds, and smell the fresh air.

We did get a couple fans to help circulate the air, and haven’t yet had a day that it wasn’t enough. I will post back about this at the end of the summer to see if I have a different opinion.

As far as no dishwasher, for two of us, it really isn’t so hard to do the dishes the “old fashioned way”, by hand. Some homes and apartments do have dishwashers.

The laundry, I will write a post on that later to explain the system. But, not so bad! Some apartments and especially most homes have a washer and dryer.

Finding an apartment in Sweden can be really hard, because of high demand, and not enough apartments or houses for rent. I am not sure why this is, and will research at some point. I think it is a matter of government regulation, and taxes. Because of the way we came to Sweden, by a corporation, we were presented with an apartment, before I joined my husband. Student housing is really hard to find. So renting rooms is common.

We have an entry with coat rack, and room for the bikes. Then going upstairs you enter the sunroom, next the wide foyer, which has an eat in kitchen to the left, and master bedroom and bath going straight forward. The family/living room is to the right, with a smaller second bedroom behind that. Take a look at the slide show below to see the apartment. This was taken by Daren before I got here.

I “love” my Swedish apartment. It came furnished. I am really liking the smaller size of it. It is enough, and so easy and quick to clean. I am really re – thinking about the size of my American home.